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AG's Wildcat Report - Dispatches on the Wildcats, from Anthony Gimino

Posts Tagged ‘Josh Pastner’

Pastner meets with the media: On Arizona, youth, Derrick Williams and more

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

As energetic as always, Memphis coach and former Arizona Wildcat Josh Pastner met with the media Thursday.
Mark D. Smith-US PRESSWIRE

CLICK HERE FOR THE TRANSCRIPT OF ARIZONA’S MEDIA SESSION

Memphis coach Josh Pastner met with the media in Tulsa on Thursday to talk about his team’s NCAA Tournament game against Arizona on Friday.

Through the magic of fast transcripts and the internet, you can read everything Pastner and selected Memphis players had to say at the podium at ASAP sports. Here is a sampling:

Pastner’s opening remark:

“This is my 14th time I’ve been part of the NCAA Tournament, and I used to always come in the back to watch the coaches speak to the media. When Lute Olson and John Calipari would be in the media it would be packed. With me there’s only a few people. So I recognize the difference between being a Hall of Famer and not. There you go (smiling). …

“We’ll have to play a great game. We’ll be ready to go, but we know we’re playing a great basketball team in Arizona. Just since everyone’s been asking about me being my alma mater, I love Arizona. I was there for 12 years. Loved every second being there. I loved my time there. Got a bachelor’s and masters from there. Was part of great wins there. And some of my best friends are there in Tucson.

“But the facts are I bleed blue and gray. I love where I’m at. I’m all about Memphis. I do stay up late at night and watch the Arizona games on TV, and I root for Arizona when they’re playing in the Pac-10. This will be the one time I’m not rooting for them. Other than that, that’s where we’re at.”

(more…)

Video: Pastner says Memphis is peaking at the right time

Monday, March 14th, 2011
CREDIT: CBS Sports
CAPTION: Josh Pastner talks to CBS College Sports about the matchup with Arizona.

Memphis coach Josh Pastner was a guest on the phone with CBS College Sports, talking about the NCAA Tournament matchup against Arizona and how he thinks his Tigers are playing their best ball of the season.

He notes that his team is the youngest in school history and the seventh youngest in the country. Pastner said, naturally, it just took time for the players to jell and to accept new roles. Not everyone can be the scoring star they were in high school.

“At the beginning of the year, what I did was put up the total amount of points everyone averaged in high school and it came up to like 258 points,” Pastner said. “I said, Guys, we’re not going to average that. We’re going to have to give up points as an individual so collectively we can be better as a team.’

“I think we’re really getting to that stage now and I like the momentum that we have going into the NCAA Tournament.”

Arizona will play Memphis in Tulsa, Okla., on Friday.

Through the years with Josh Pastner: Words and photos

Monday, March 14th, 2011

Josh Pastner had to do push-ups after a losing a bet at the 2007 alumni exhibition game. Tucson Citizen photo

Back in 2007, Josh Pastner lost to Arizona. Kind of.

Pastner, a Wildcats assistant coach at the time, was one of the head coaches for the Lute Olson All-Star Classic, an event that brought back many of the program’s all-time greats in an exhibition game.

Pastner’s team lost, so he had to do 20 push-ups at midcourt after the game.

Now, the stakes are more than push-ups. It’s Pastner’s Memphis team vs. Sean Miller’s Arizona team in the NCAA Tournament on Friday. Each coach is in his second year as the head coach at that school. Each coach in his first NCAAs as the head coach at that school.

Pastner’s Arizona connection is a rich storyline — thanks, NCAA selection committee — and here’s a quick Pastner timeline at Arizona:

Eugene Edgerson hugs Josh Pastner during Midnight Madness in 1997, the season after UA won the NCAA national basketball championship. Tucson Citizen photo.

1996: Arrives at UA as a walk-on guard from Kingwood, Texas

1997: Part of UA’s NCAA championship team.

1998: Receives bachelor’s degree in family studies after only 2.5 years.

1999: Coaches AAU Houston Hoops to Nike tournament title; finished master’s in teacher education.

2000: Is named Academic All-Pac-10 second team, ends UA playing career averaging 0.9 points a game in 42 games; leads Houston Hoops to Global World title in summer.

2000-01: Lute Olson names him UA graduate assistant coach.

2001-02: Is appointed UA’s video and recruiting coordinator.

April 2002: Is named UA assistant

2005: Rivals.com calls him one of nation’s top 25 recruiters.

2007: Turns down Kentucky assistant’s job.

2008: Memphis offers him an assistant’s job; he accepts.

* * *

Here is a column I wrote for the print edition of the Tucson Citizen, when Pastner was mulling that offer from Memphis (with some archived photos mixed in):

The program probably needs him more than ever, but if Arizona basketball assistant coach Josh Pastner is walking out the door for Memphis, there’s only one thing to say.

Good for you, Josh.

The timing isn’t great because the Wildcats, in the midst of an extreme coaching makeover, need Pastner’s stability more than ever. But he doesn’t owe the university, the program, the players, the recruits or coach Lute Olson any more than he has already given.

As a walk-on guard, video and recruiting coordinator, administrative assistant, assistant coach and lead recruiter, he always gave more than the demanding job demanded.

It was never surprising to see him – anywhere, anytime – with a cell phone attached to his ear, talking to a player, a recruit, a coach, whoever. Working. Always working.

Josh Pastner: Renowned multi-tasker. Tucson Citizen photo

Maybe the only surprising thing about seeing Pastner on a cell phone would be if he wasn’t text messaging on another phone at the same time.

He once told me, “If I was about to get married and my bride and I were walking down the aisle, I guarantee you my phone would be on my clip. And not turned off, either. I’d give the moment some respect and put it on vibrate, but I wouldn’t turn it off.”

He was kidding.

We think.

Point is, no one could be more devoted to Arizona basketball than Pastner, who arrived in 1996, bleeding red and blue and ready to learn from the first day. Nobody in Tucson has slept less in the past 12 years.

He, quite famously now, earned an undergraduate degree in 2 1/2 years.

He’s given his all to the UA’s coaching job. Now, he needs to do something for his coaching career.

Becoming a head coach is the twinkle in his eye, and he can best get there by skedaddling out of Tucson and adding new experiences and challenges to his Olson-infused resume.

Being at national-championship-contending Memphis under John Calipari will do the trick.

From left, From left Quynn Tebbs, John Ash and Josh Pastner keep a close eye on the action against Kansas in the 1997 tournament. Tucson Citizen photo.

We’ve become so used to Pastner, on the sideline, as a local pitchman and through charitable ventures, that it’s easy to forget he’s only 30. He’s accomplished plenty with a lot left to learn.

He will be a head coach someday. No doubt. Maybe the road eventually will lead him back here. It works that way sometimes. But first he needs to hit the road. Go, Josh, go.

Some of Arizona’s most highly rated recruits have signed under Pastner’s direction, although Olson has, of course, retained the final say.

That’s not to say all of the recruits were hits, or that there was enough depth in those classes to cover for the predictable early entries to the NBA, but Pastner, even at his tender age, became a recruiting force that Arizona will be hard-pressed to immediately emulate at a critical time.

Jeff Goodman at Foxsports.com recently polled coaches for their take on “guys that instill a level of fear into their colleagues when they stroll into a gym.” Pastner was No. 7 on that list of elite assistants at high-major programs.

Perhaps he would have been inclined to stay if he had been elevated this offseason to be Olson’s top assistant.

Josh Pastner plays against Illinois State in the 1998 NCAA Tournament. Tucson Citizen photo

Olson has brought in two veteran coaches with varied experience – Russ Pennell (officially) and Mike Dunlap (unofficially) – to sit on the bench with him.

Can’t argue with either’s pedigree.

But it’s not really about whether Pastner would have been/should have been No. 1, No. 2 or No. 3. In any case, he needed to expand beyond Arizona and probably should have done it years ago.

There’s no questioning his loyalty. Pastner could have gone to Kentucky as an assistant to Billy Gillispie last season. He could have gone to other places, at other times.

Loyalty. If anything, the Arizona basketball events of the past 12 months have reinforced that this is a business – an often cold business where loyalty gets drop-kicked out the back door.

Maybe that’s good, maybe that’s bad. It’s often just the way it is.

Long-time Olson assistant Jim Rosborough? Ousted.

Would-be successor Kevin O’Neill, who came in with the support of exalted alums Steve Kerr, Sean Elliott and others? Never made it to his promised second year as an assistant.

Assistant coach Miles Simon, hero of the 1997 national championship team? Contract not renewed.

And now Pastner is packing up, too. It’s all over except for the official announcement.

He knows: Sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do.

And Pastner is doing the right thing.

Good luck, Josh.

World Wide Wildcats — News of UA athletes new and old

Thursday, November 19th, 2009
UA quarterback Nick Foles from Tuesday's press conference/photo courtesy of WildcatSportsReport.com

UA quarterback Nick Foles, who leads an efficient passing game, answers questions from Tuesday's press conference/photo courtesy of WildcatSportsReport.com

Here we are for our third go-round of WWW. The big Oregon-Arizona game is approaching, so let’s start with that.

SI.com: Cory McCartney breaks down the matchup under this headline: Game of the Week: Oregon battles Arizona for Rose Bowl life.

I might rewrite that to say Arizona battles Oregon for Rose Bowl life … but whatever.

There’s some good stuff here scouting the Arizona offense, with comments from NAU defensive coordinator Andy Thompson.

He says, “They can line up and run right at you. They’re a tough, physical, very hard-nosed team, and then they have the game where they can spread you out and throw the football with a passing game that’s very efficient. They make you cover the whole field. They have the ability to do both and it makes it very difficult on a defense.” Check the link for more.

  • CBSSports.com: Gary Parrish — who I find to be one of the best and most even-handed of the national college hoops columnist — weighs on in Josh Pastner’s coaching debut from Tuesday night. The Boy Wonder did well to have his Memphis team within a winning shot of No. 1 Kansas at the end. There’s more Pastner from SI.com, and even more from one of our new bloggers, Matt Minkus, who interviewed Pastner recently for the locally produced radioexiles.com.


  • NewOrleans.com: Former UA All-American Chris McAlister is back in the NFL. Knee problems plagued his past two seasons, but the ex-Baltimore Raven All-Pro cornerback has signed on the New Orleans Saints and appears ready to roll. He joins ex-Cat running back Mike Bell with the Saints. Super Bowl bound?


  • Eugene Register-Guard: The Oregon Ducks haven’t been very lucky with quarterbacks in their past two trips to Tucson.


  • NBA.com: Nice Q&A with the Dallas Mavericks’ Jason Terry, who is still the same super sub he was for Arizona’s 1997 national championship team. Except one thing: He’s actually playing some defense this season. He explains.

Previous World Wide Wildcats:
Oct. 29

Nov. 12

Anthony Gimino can be reached at anthonygimino (at) gmail.com

World Wide Wildcats — News of UA athletes new and old

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Welcome to our second installment of WWW. We lead off with a former football coach who writes a periodic newspaper column … you be the judge at which job he is better at.

Damon Stoudamire is part of the best backcourt in Arizona history, at least according to one ranking.

Damon Stoudamire is part of the best backcourt in Arizona history, at least according to one ranking.

Palm Springs Desert Sun: Ex-Arizona coach John Mackovic writes that the man who succeeded him, Mike Stoops, is one of the top two candidates for Pac-10 Coach of the Year.

Wildaboutazcats.com: Ranking the top 10 backcourts in Arizona history. No. 1 on this list? Khalid Reeves and Damon Stoudamire.

NBA.com: Former Wildcat Andre Iguodala is known for his highlight dunks with the Philadelphia 76ers, but this story examines his defense and ranks as one of the league’s top two-way players. Says Sixers coach Eddie Jordan: “I call him ‘TCP.’ The complete package.”

USA Today: Ex-Cat Josh Pastner, the new head coach at Memphis, signed one of the nation’s top basketball classes this week.

Rivals.com: Ranking the Top 25 college basketball coaches. No. 1 is North Carolina’s Roy Williams, followed by Michigan Stats’ Tom Izzo and Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski. Where does Sean Miller fall on the list?

Previous World Wide Wildcats:
Oct. 29

Anthony Gimino can be reached at anthonygimino (at) gmail.com